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Lecture 2 Institutions of the International Economy

Lecture 2 Institutions of the International Economy. Econ 340. Announcements. We will start discussing news next week, on Wednesday Jan 18 (since there is no class on Monday, MLK Day). You should be watching for international economic news. Powerpoint slides: I will post them

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Lecture 2 Institutions of the International Economy

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  1. Lecture 2Institutions of the International Economy Econ 340

  2. Announcements • We will start discussing news next week, on Wednesday Jan 18 (since there is no class on Monday, MLK Day). You should be watching for international economic news. • Powerpoint slides: I will post them • Before lectures • 6 per page • 3 per page with lines • After lectures: as presented • Lecture itself will be posted as podcast • See BlueReview in CTools Lecture 2: Institutions

  3. Lecture Outline: Institutions of the International Economy • The Three Main Institutions (IMF, World Bank, WTO) • Why They Were Created, and When • How They Have Changed • Their Reputations Today • Other Institutions • United Nations • OECD = Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development • Preferential Trading Arrangements • What’s Happening Now? • The World Financial Crisis • The Doha Round • PTAs • Trade Disputes Lecture 2: Institutions

  4. The Three Main Institutions • Functions • IMF (International Monetary Fund): Financial Assistance • World Bank: Development Assistance • WTO (World Trade Organization): Trade Policy Regulation and Negotiation Lecture 2: Institutions

  5. The Three Main Institutions • History • Before World War II • Great Depression • High Tariffs on trade • Competitive Devaluations of currencies “Beggar Thy Neighbor Policies” (we’ll see why later) Lecture 2: Institutions

  6. The Three Main Institutions • History • End of World War II • Bretton Woods Meeting (Bretton Woods, NH) • IMF • World Bank • ITO (International Trade Organization) • Never ratified • Instead: GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) Lecture 2: Institutions

  7. The Three Main Institutions • History • Changes since 1940s • IMF • Originally enforced pegged exchange rates • Purpose: To prevent “beggar-thy-neighbor” exchange-rate policies • Major currencies switched to floating in 1970s • IMF still provides financial assistance • Until recently, mostly to developing countries • Subject to “conditionality” = required policy changes • In 21st century, many countries were paying off their loans, until recently • IMF was wondering about its income, but now is lending to countries in crisis, such as Greece and Ireland. Lecture 2: Institutions

  8. The Three Main Institutions • History • Changes since 1940s • World Bank • =IBRD (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) • Originally intended for reconstruction from war • Now mainly assists development • Much of it by funding and assisting with projects Lecture 2: Institutions

  9. The Three Main Institutions • History • Changes since 1940s • GATT • Rules of international trade policy • “Rounds” of negotiation • Uruguay Round • Created WTO in 1995 • Currently is/was doing Doha Round Begun 2001 in Doha, Qatar Stumbled in 2003 (Cancún) and 2005 (HK) Suspended July 2006, but restarted 2007 Suspended again in 2008 • Future uncertain: More on this later Lecture 2: Institutions

  10. The Three Main Institutions • Reputation today, among some: Lecture 2: Institutions

  11. The Three Main Institutions • Reputation Today: Criticized by • Opponents of globalization • Opponents of corporations • Some in Developing Countries for dominance • by US • by rich countries • by corporations • Some in US for undermining US power Lecture 2: Institutions

  12. The Three Main Institutions • Reputation Today: Criticized by • Scholars for institutional flaws • IMF: Has imposed misguided policies • World Bank: Wastes resources on corrupt elites • WTO: Dominated by rich countries, corporations Lecture 2: Institutions

  13. Other Institutions • G-7, G-8, G-20: These are Groups of countries • G-7 = US, Canada, Japan, Britain, France, Germany, Italy • Finance ministers meet • G-8 = G-7 + Russia (since 1998) • Heads of state met annually, until recently • G-20 = G-8 + Australia & EU, + 10 major EMEs (Emerging Market Economies) = 19 Countries + EU Lecture 2: Institutions

  14. Other Institutions • G-20 • Used to meet regularly, but only the finance ministers • First G-20 summit (i.e., heads of state) met November 2008, London • Met again September 2009, Pittsburgh • Now looks like G-20 summits will be the main regular meeting, probably once a year • Last was in Cannes, France, November 2011 • Next, in June 2012, will be in Los Cabos, Mexico • Finance Ministers still meet, as needed • 5 times in 2011! • Next in Mexico City, February 2012 Lecture 2: Institutions

  15. G-20 Lecture 2: Institutions

  16. Other Institutions • UN = United Nations • UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) • ILO (International Labor Organization) • WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) Lecture 2: Institutions

  17. Other Institutions • EU = European Union • NAFTA = North American Free Trade Area • OECD = Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development • Club of high-income countries • Does research, collects data, drafts policies Lecture 2: Institutions

  18. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • Crisis started in US with burst of housing bubble • Loans had been made, counting on rising house prices • With burst, loans went bad • Banks and other institutions were interlinked via • Bad loans • Complex financial instruments whose value fell and/or was uncertain Lecture 2: Institutions

  19. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • Crisis spread • To most other developed countries through financial institutions • To some developing countries too • Income and expenditure fell, causing world-wide recession • Falling house prices alone reduced wealth • Failures in financial markets made it worse • Banks stopped lending Lecture 2: Institutions

  20. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • Recession caused immediate drop in international trade • This made matters worse • It spread the recession to countries that had not been exposed to financial markets Lecture 2: Institutions

  21. Source: IMF & IndexQ.org Lecture 2: Institutions

  22. July 2008 Mar 2009 Source: IMF Lecture 2: Institutions

  23. July 2008 Feb 2009 Down 43% Source: IMF Lecture 2: Institutions

  24. Global Recession StatusJanuary 10, 2010 In Recession Moderating Recovering Expanding Source: Dismal Scientist Lecture 2: Institutions

  25. Global Recession StatusDecember 31, 2010 Source: Dismal Scientist Lecture 2: Institutions

  26. Global Recession StatusJanuary 8, 2012 Source: Dismal Scientist Lecture 2: Institutions

  27. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • What was done about it? • Central banks, cut interest rates and extended credit. • Banks were rescued. • Countries used “Stimulus Packages” (tax cuts and spending increases) to stimulate economies. • G-20 began meeting, first in London Lecture 2: Institutions

  28. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • What was done about it? • IMF back in business making loans. • Packages already in hand for • Iceland • Hungary • Ukraine. • Many more • G-20 promised more funds to IMF Lecture 2: Institutions

  29. What’s Happening Now? – Recovery from The World Financial Crisis • What will prevent future problems? • Financial regulation • restraints on bank lending • reform of credit rating agencies • Managed currency policies? (US concern with China’s currency.) Lecture 2: Institutions

  30. What’s Happening Now? – Debt Problems of EU • In 2010, starting with Greece, countries in the Eurozone found themselves with unmanageable debts • Markets feared default; interest rates rose • EU and IMF stepped in with loans • Similar things happened later to Ireland, and markets now fear the same for Portugal and Spain Lecture 2: Institutions

  31. What’s Happening Now? – Debt Problems of EU • Leaders of the EU have met repeatedly • They disagree over • Who will pay for any bailout of Greece and others • Whether the bond holders (those who own sovereign debt of Greece ad others) should bear some cost • Result has been repeated “fixes” that don’t solve the problem • Some say this all threatens the euro. Lecture 2: Institutions

  32. What’s Happening Now? - IFIs • IFIs = International Financial Institutions • IMF and World Bank • See Lachman article: • Reputations suffered • IMF from financial crises and mis-management • But recent actions have looked better • WB from leadership of Paul Wolfowitz • Roles have been reduced by private lending, but their staffs have grown, by 50% over last 10 years • What should they be doing? • IMF: surveillance over exchange systems and imbalances • WB: alleviate poverty, especially in Africa Slide Omitted

  33. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round (of multilateral trade negotiations under the WTO) • Began at Doha, Qatar, 2001 • Negotiations • Take place at WTO Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland • But periodically occur at “Ministerial Meetings” (meetings of trade ministers) in other cities Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  34. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round starts and stops • Cancún Ministerial, 2003: Failed to agree Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  35. Cancún: Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  36. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round starts and stops • Cancún Ministerial, 2003: Failed to agree • Hong Kong Ministerial, 2005: Only minimal agreement Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  37. Hong Kong: Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  38. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round starts and stops • Cancún Ministerial, 2003: Failed to agree • Hong Kong Ministerial, 2005: Only minimal agreement • Negotiations suspended July 2006, restarted 2007 • US, EU, Brazil and India met in Potsdam, Germany, but ended in deadlock June 21, 2007 • June 30, 2007: US negotiating authority expired • July 29, 2008: Negotiations broke down over agriculture • Future uncertain; don’t know when, & whether, talks will resume Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  39. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round • Objective was: Doha Development Agenda • To achieve substantial further reduction in trade barriers, • In both developed and developing countries, • While for the first time providing meaningful benefits to developing countries • Conflicts: • US and EU agricultural subsidies and tariffs • Developing-country import barriers in manufactures and services Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  40. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round • Reasons for failure of Doha Round: • All countries wanted • other countries to reduce trade-distorting policies, • but not to change their own policies • WTO requires agreement by all of its member countries (now 156); that’s hard to achieve! Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  41. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round • Reason for collapse in 2008 : Disagreement in agriculture • US trade distorting subsidies: US would “cap” these, but not at a low enough level to satisfy India and China • “Special safeguards” for India: Permission to raise tariffs if imports rise above some threshold Slide Omitted Lecture 2: Institutions

  42. What’s Happening Now? - Doha • Doha Round: What will happen next? • The Round may be able to restart. This will require leadership, probably from U.S. • Likely to be increased move toward PTAs/RTAs among pairs and small groups of countries • Who loses? Developing countries (see Blustein article) Lecture 2: Institutions

  43. What’s Happening Now? - PTAs • PTAs (Preferential Trade Agreements) • Most countries are in some of these and are negotiating to form more • Typical PTA is “Free Trade Area” (FTA) such as • NAFTA (North American Free Trade Area) • We’ll study the effects of these later in the course • They are not necessarily economically beneficial Lecture 2: Institutions

  44. What’s Happening Now? - PTAs Lecture 2: Institutions

  45. What’s Happening Now? - PTAs • Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) • Started in 2006 as Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership: Singapore, Brunei, Chile and New Zealand • In 2008, US said it would negotiate to join, and this brought in 4 more countries: Australia, Peru, Malaysia, and Vietnam. • In 2001, Japan and Canada indicated an interest in joining. • The countries are extremely diverse. Lecture 2: Institutions

  46. What’s Happening Now? - PTAs • Objective of the TPP • To negotiate a “state of the art” trade agreement • It would go beyond existing agreements • It would permit additional countries to join • US claims it will • Enhance competitiveness • Promote US employment • Demand high standards Lecture 2: Institutions

  47. Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) Notified to GATT/WTO Lecture 2: Institutions

  48. What’s Happening Now? - PTAs • Most recently, in 2011: • February 2011: India and Japan sign FTA • June 2011: 26 African nations launch talks for FTA • October 2011: US Congress approves FTAs with Korea, Colombia, Panama • October 2011: 8 former Soviet states sign FTA • November 2011: US-Korea FTA approved by Korea Lecture 2: Institutions

  49. What’s Happening Now? - Disputes • Trade Disputes • Boeing-Airbus: US vs EU over aircraft subsidies Lecture 2: Institutions

  50. What’s Happening Now? - Disputes • Trade Disputes • Byrd Amendment: US redistribution of anti-dumping duties, ruled illegal by WTO Lecture 2: Institutions

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